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Never has there been such clear proof that I don't read every paragraph of the articles I blog about.

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Never has there been such clear proof that I don't read every paragraph of the articles I blog about. - Hallo friend WELCOME TO AMERICA, In the article you read this time with the title Never has there been such clear proof that I don't read every paragraph of the articles I blog about., we have prepared well for this article you read and download the information therein. hopefully fill posts Article AMERICA, Article CULTURAL, Article ECONOMIC, Article POLITICAL, Article SECURITY, Article SOCCER, Article SOCIAL, we write this you can understand. Well, happy reading.

Title : Never has there been such clear proof that I don't read every paragraph of the articles I blog about.
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Never has there been such clear proof that I don't read every paragraph of the articles I blog about.

Yesterday, I blogged about "Pellet Ice Is the Good Ice" — a New Yorker article by Helen Rosner. I'd read the paragraph that said "industrial pellet ice machines are the size of dishwashers, and (like most heavy-duty restaurant appliances) can cost thousands of dollars." 

So when some commenters said they owned an ice-making machine called the G.E. Opal, I said: "But the main thing I'd like to know is whether this [ice] is the same thing the New Yorker writer is raving about." 

Freeman Hunt gave me this gentle nudge — "The writer seems to think so" —  and eventually I get around to looking back at the article. Well! The entire last paragraph — 201 words — is about the G.E. Opal... 
... a hulking countertop appliance that makes a pound of pellet ice per hour and, relative to its commercial counterparts, costs a mere four hundred and ninety-nine dollars....  The G.E. Opal was an absurd purchase, unnecessary and indefensible. But it brings me the good ice....

I confess! I link to things all the time that I haven't completely read. I've always partially read these things. I don't link just based on headlines, and I'm actually quite likely to jump to the middle of articles, where, I believe, the coolest/strangest stuff is buried. But, wow, I really missed the whole paragraph about the G.E. Opal. The article now feels as though it's an embedded ad for the G.E. Opal, though I trust The New Yorker to mark it "Sponsored" if that were indeed the case. And I missed my chance — which I'll take right now — to give you an Amazon Associates link to to the G.E. Opal. The thing is $499. That was a real opportunity for me that I squandered. Such is the fast-moving world of blogging. And yet it's slow enough for me to begin a day — at 5 a.m. — with a confession of my own sloppiness and an a late-breaking shot at making a percentage of $499.

But I do see at Amazon that some buyers are complaining about the sound the thing makes: "The squeals and squeaks from my unit, are unbearable" (with video, including audio of the sound). Does it make that sound all the time? It's a bit like the sound my refrigerator makes — occasionally and briefly — in its ice-making cycle. Yes, I have an ice-maker, but I'm considering paying $499 for a bulky countertop appliance so I can get "the good ice."

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Yesterday, I blogged about "Pellet Ice Is the Good Ice" — a New Yorker article by Helen Rosner. I'd read the paragraph that said "industrial pellet ice machines are the size of dishwashers, and (like most heavy-duty restaurant appliances) can cost thousands of dollars." 

So when some commenters said they owned an ice-making machine called the G.E. Opal, I said: "But the main thing I'd like to know is whether this [ice] is the same thing the New Yorker writer is raving about." 

Freeman Hunt gave me this gentle nudge — "The writer seems to think so" —  and eventually I get around to looking back at the article. Well! The entire last paragraph — 201 words — is about the G.E. Opal... 
... a hulking countertop appliance that makes a pound of pellet ice per hour and, relative to its commercial counterparts, costs a mere four hundred and ninety-nine dollars....  The G.E. Opal was an absurd purchase, unnecessary and indefensible. But it brings me the good ice....

I confess! I link to things all the time that I haven't completely read. I've always partially read these things. I don't link just based on headlines, and I'm actually quite likely to jump to the middle of articles, where, I believe, the coolest/strangest stuff is buried. But, wow, I really missed the whole paragraph about the G.E. Opal. The article now feels as though it's an embedded ad for the G.E. Opal, though I trust The New Yorker to mark it "Sponsored" if that were indeed the case. And I missed my chance — which I'll take right now — to give you an Amazon Associates link to to the G.E. Opal. The thing is $499. That was a real opportunity for me that I squandered. Such is the fast-moving world of blogging. And yet it's slow enough for me to begin a day — at 5 a.m. — with a confession of my own sloppiness and an a late-breaking shot at making a percentage of $499.

But I do see at Amazon that some buyers are complaining about the sound the thing makes: "The squeals and squeaks from my unit, are unbearable" (with video, including audio of the sound). Does it make that sound all the time? It's a bit like the sound my refrigerator makes — occasionally and briefly — in its ice-making cycle. Yes, I have an ice-maker, but I'm considering paying $499 for a bulky countertop appliance so I can get "the good ice."



Thus articles Never has there been such clear proof that I don't read every paragraph of the articles I blog about.

that is all articles Never has there been such clear proof that I don't read every paragraph of the articles I blog about. This time, hopefully can provide benefits to all of you. Okay, see you in another article posting.

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